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When Contracts Freeze Sovereignty: The Global Scandal of Fiscal Stability Clauses -By Fransiscus Nanga Roka

Still, the international system has managed to dismiss this arrangement with surprising ease. The basic concept is straightforward: governments are dangerous for changing the game but companies are sober in their call to be exempt from change. This ideology sees public law as a danger to investment rather than the face of self-governance. He has a world view that equates predictability with justice and places investors confidence over democratic legitimacy.

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A legal system that allows governments to virtually sign away their right and ability to govern is therefore something fundamentally obscene. It is exactly what many fiscal stability clauses do. Even more intensely in extractive industries and large infrastructure contracts, the clauses that are sold as instruments of predictability to investors have been buried within investment treaties. In reality, they can be constitutional traps, mechanisms to discipline states that alter tax rules, environmental standards or labor protections in response to democratic pressures and public necessity.

The justification is always lavished with more formalised language. Investors need certainty. Markets demand confidence. Capital fears unpredictability. Yet beneath this veneer of rationalistic vocabulary is an uglier reality. Fiscal stability clauses often lock in a status quo where private profit is put above public sovereignty. They instruct elected governments that although they are in office, they only somewhat run the legal and fiscal future of their own state. If they even try to legislate in ways that lessen expected corporate profits, then they’ll have to pay off the investors who benefit from national assets!

This is not legal neutrality. It is structured asymmetry.

Proponents of fiscal stability clauses maintain that they are needed to incentivise foreign investment, especially in capital intensive sectors with long lead times. Against that, though, is not an entirely frivolous argument. They are not naive and do want to be protected from arbitrary conduct by the state. But then, it turns from protection to paralysis. As not a one would ever let state confiscate assets on the fly. Nor, for that matter, should a corporation be permitted to regard public law as an inconvenience and democracy as a commercial liability to price out of the equation.

But the policy has come under especially harsh scrutiny in developing countries. Governments operating under fiscal pressure, debt stress and political urgency also frequently sign contracts from a position of weakness. Third, they are told that without extraordinary guarantees money will go elsewhere. Because if those same governments find, years later, that commodity prices have changed again — climate obligations intensified; inequality increased to the point where citizens want a more equitable share of national wealth? The state can of course change the law but only at the risk of arbitration, damages claims and reputational damage along with investor flight. In reality, sovereignty exists only as a technical formality.

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Anyone who still defends self-government ought to be alarmed by this. It is not a small administrative choice on fiscal policy. It stands at the heart of democratic power. States announce taxation, royalties and export duties to weather crises and redistribute wealth, they reform subsidies or adjust the regulatory framework in pursuit of development. A mere business arrangement to freeze those tools contractually for decades is not it. Public power that is privatised.

Still, the international system has managed to dismiss this arrangement with surprising ease. The basic concept is straightforward: governments are dangerous for changing the game but companies are sober in their call to be exempt from change. This ideology sees public law as a danger to investment rather than the face of self-governance. He has a world view that equates predictability with justice and places investors confidence over democratic legitimacy.

The problem with fiscal stability clauses, it is said what makes them so insidious both in their legal design and moral posture. They masquerade as fairness. This is often portrayed as protection against opportunism, when in many cases it entrenches the opposite: strategic bargaining with one side receiving assurance of long-term insulation from political accountability in return for ceding policy space under immediate pressure. The result is a muted but monumental transfer of power away from parliaments and publics, towards contract drafters, arbitrators and boardrooms.

Naturally, every stability clause is not made equal. Narrow, negotiated, with adjustment mechanisms. But that overview should not blur the overall pattern. These clauses have often been misused within jurisdictions to constitutionally entrench corporate privilege without democratic buy-in. They fashion a world whose formal structure preserves the sovereign equality of states but eventually thwarts their material autonomy, so that in form they are free while heavily punished whenever governing against rentierism.

This is the reason as to why debating fiscal stability clauses, phrases put in reserves with a non-financial significance, particularly when our public debt is concerned. The one on which we should take into account that proving whether these are absolute rather than elastic was never anything but technical? It is political. It is about who rules. When the situation dictates, can governments change fiscal terms or must we hold one set of contractual expectations written years before under conditions that manifested a clear imbalance at all costs to public welfare? Does democracy always have to seek permission from capital before being able to respond to crisis?

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Those who defend this model name it stability. A more sincere word would be surrender.

If the international legal order wants to have any inch of credibility, it cannot afford to treat sovereignty as something that can be negotiated away in instances where investors want insulation from politics. Contracts are not an end in themselves, they should help development rather than putting democracy on ice. States require rules but they also necessitate space in order to govern, innovate and exist. Its not a safety net, its a contract that can make the sovereign state hostage of yesterdays fiscal conditions. It is a scandal.

Fransiscus Nanga Roka

Faculty of Law University 17 August 1945 Surabaya Indfonesia

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